Pre-College Education Program
Solicitation Title: Pre-College Education Program
Event Type: Rolling Deadline
Funding Amount: varies; see Other Information
Sponsor Deadline: Wednesday, June 1, 2022
Solicitation Link: https://us-jf.org/programs/grants/pre-college-education/
Overview
<p>The United States-Japan Foundation supports innovative education projects that help young Americans and Japanese learn about each other’s society, culture, and country as well as learn to work together on issues of common concern. The Foundation focuses on K-12 education and throughout its history has been at the forefront of supporting teacher professional development projects that train US teachers to teach about Japan and Japanese teachers to teach about the United States. In addition, the Foundation funds projects that work directly with students, that develop top quality curriculum materials on America or Japan for educational audiences in the other country, that connect schools and classrooms in the US and Japan, and that develop and improve instruction in Japanese language.</p> <p>The Foundation seeks to respond to needs at the pre-college level as identified by experts in US-Japan education and practitioners in the field. We are open to diverse methodologies for engaging teachers and students in the study of Japan and the United States that range from history, art, and music to science and society (please see our recent grants section for examples of projects we have funded). The Foundation also proactively leads efforts to develop educational programs and projects when a significant need is discerned.</p> <p>USJF seeks to support programs that:</p> <ul> <li>Build human networks among teachers on both sides of the Pacific with a mutual interest in teaching and learning about Japan, the US, and US-Japan relations, particularly in the fields of social studies, science, and Japanese language instruction (support for language instruction is currently limited to Japanese-language programs in the United States)</li> <li>Invest in programs in regions in both countries that have been underserved in terms of exposure to and resources for learning about the other country</li> <li>Take advantage of new technology to bring Japanese and American teachers and students together</li> <li>Enlist the expertise residing at institutions of higher learning and other NGOs in support of US-Japan studies programs at the elementary, middle and high school levels in both countries</li> <li>Present the products of research and policy studies and media programs on US-Japan issues to an audience of pre-college students and their teachers, with the aim of fostering mutual learning and understanding among the young people who will be the future leaders in both countries, forced to come to terms with making policy and responding to the changing nature of the US-Japan relationship</li> <li>Enhance, expand and preserve the study of the Japanese language at the pre-college level in the United States through teacher professional development opportunities, national standards, and performance assessments</li> <li>Develop curricula and other products focused on Japan and/or the United States that area immediately relevant to and useful in meeting the demands faced by teachers at the pre-college level</li> <li>Continue to support and enhance the US-Japan knowledge of the vast network of teachers and students who have been exposed to US-Japan studies over the years through USJF-sponsored programs</li> </ul> <p>Proposed projects should seek to incorporate one or more of these elements in a way that is particularly suited to the need(s) in pre-college education they seek to address.</p> <p><strong>2022 Theme: Disruption and Resilience: </strong>Based on the strong response to and ongoing relevance of the 2021 Disruption and Resilience<br>theme, that theme will be continued in 2022. </p>
Solicitation Limitations: <p>The following types of projects fall outside of the Foundation’s guidelines: undergraduate education, sports exchanges, publication subsidies (unless directly related to a current USJF project), and scientific research.</p> <p>The Foundation limits overhead expenses to 10% of the total project budget.</p> Other Information:<p>Funding information: award amounts vary, but have historically been $50,000 to $100,000.</p> <p>While June 1, 2022 is the suggested deadline for Letters of Inquiry (LOIs), applicants are encouraged to submit a Letter of Inquiry as early as possible for review.</p>Last Updated:
RODA ID: 1531